LOS ANGELES A federal judge on Thursday
ordered the man behind a crudely produced anti-Islamic video that
inflamed parts of the Middle East to be detained because he is a flight
risk.
Citing a lengthy pattern of deception, U.S. Central
District Chief Magistrate Judge Suzanne Segal said Nakoula Basseley
Nakoula should be held after officials said he violated his probation
from a 2010 check fraud conviction.
"The court has a lack of trust in this defendant at this time," Segal said.
Nakoula, 55, was arrested Thursday. He had eight probation
violations, including lying to his probation officers and using aliases,
and he might face new charges that carry a maximum two-year prison
term, authorities said. Nakoula will remain behind bars until another
hearing where a judge will rule if he broke the terms of his probation.
Nakoula
wore beige pants and a collared shirt when he was led into the
courtroom handcuffed and shackled. He appeared relaxed, smiling at one
point before the hearing and conferring with his attorney.
After
his 2010 conviction, Nakoula was sentenced to 21 months in prison and
was barred from using computers or the Internet for five years without
approval from his probation officer.
Protests
have erupted around the Middle East over a 14-minute trailer for the
film "Innocence of Muslims" that depicts Prophet Muhammad as a
womanizer, religious fraud and child molester. Though the trailer was
posted to YouTube in July, the violence didn't break out until Sept. 11
and has spread since.
Nakoula's jailing appeared to be
having little immediate effect on protests expected after Friday prayers
in Islamabad, the Pakistani capital, a senior government official
speaking on condition of anonymity told CBS News. He said the detention
"will not subdue the protests immediately." However, he said, the
government expected fewer participants than there were a week ago.
Nakoula, a Christian originally from Egypt, went into hiding after he was identified as the man behind the trailer.
In
court Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Dugdale said Nakoula was
flight risk, partially because of the uproar over the film. The
violence in the Middle East broke out Sept. 11 and has spread since,
killing dozens, including Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens.
"He has every incentive to disappear," Dugdale said.
The
hearing had an unusual wrinkle as the news media were banned from the
courtroom, and reporters had to watch the proceedings on a TV in a
different courthouse a couple blocks away. Court officials didn't give a
reason for the decision.
Nakoula's attorney Steven
Seiden sought to have the hearing closed and his client released on
$10,000 bail. He argued Nakoula has checked in with his probation
officer frequently and made no attempts to leave Southern California.
Seiden
was concerned that Nakoula would be in danger in federal prison because
of Muslim inmates, but prosecutors said he likely would be placed in
protective custody.
The full story about Nakoula and the film still isn't known.
The
movie was made last year by a man who called himself Sam Bacile. After
the violence erupted, a man who identified himself as Bacile called
media outlets including The Associated Press, took credit for the film
and said it was meant to portray the truth about Muhammad and Islam,
which he called a cancer.
The next day, the AP determined
there was no Bacile and linked the identity to Nakoula, a former gas
station owner with a drug conviction and a history of using aliases.
Federal authorities later confirmed there was no Bacile and that Nakoula
was behind the movie.
Before going into hiding, Nakoula
acknowledged to the AP he was involved with the film, but said he only
worked on logistics and management.
A film permit listed
Media for Christ, a Los Angeles-area charity run by other Egyptian
Christians, as the production company. Most of the film was made at the
charity's headquarters. Steve Klein, an insurance agent in Hemet and
outspoken Muslim critic, has said he was a consultant and promoter for
the film.
The trailer still can be found on YouTube. The
Obama administration asked Google, YouTube's parent, to take down the
video but the company has refused, saying it did not violate its content
standards.
Meantime, a number of actors and workers on
the film have come forward to say they were duped. They say they were
hired for a film titled "Desert Warrior" and there was no mention of
Islam or Muhammad in the script. Those references were dubbed in after
filming was completed.
Actress Cindy Lee Garcia has sued to get the trailer taken down, saying she was duped.
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